A students' union has told MPs that law reforms that would allow the worst student loan defaulters to be arrested at New Zealand's border will miss their target and encourage expats to become permanent "student loan refugees".
The New Zealand University Students' Association (NZUSA) told a select committee considering the reforms that the hardline sanction would be ineffective because less than half of defaulters carried New Zealand passports and the others would not get picked up at the border.
The sanction was one of a series of changes to help claw back around $430 million of defaulted debt, 80 per cent of which is owed by overseas borrowers.
NZUSA executive director Alistair Shaw questioned the efficacy of the arrest measure, saying it would only capture a handful of people and was more likely to deter expats from returning to New Zealand.
Mr Shaw said he had already been contacted by a former student with a loan who did not want to return home for a family wedding because he believed he could be arrested - even though the law had not yet passed.